Williams School in Cameron, Oklahoma was a Works Progress Administration project that was built in 1936.
[1] It was deemed significant for its character (in architecture), for its construction having provided jobs for destitute laborers "close to the edge of starvation", for providing a better learning environment, and for helping "to instill a sense of pride within the community.
"[2] It is a one-story hipped-roof 401-by-72-foot (122 by 22 m) building with native sandstone walls.
[2] Its design is from an Oklahoma State Department of Education pattern book.
This article about a property in Oklahoma on the National Register of Historic Places is a stub.